Just a few minutes ago, I had this urge or a kind of an
obsessive compulsion to drink coffee from the new CCD vending machine. Of
course, my mind and heart did not sing the same notes. My mind was mindful of
the calories in the cup of coffee but my heart was with the pleasure in the
sip. Just when I was leaving my seat, a conversation picked up and a while went
by and I was again in two minds.
I thought aloud about my coffee thoughts and immediately, my
friend offered me a box and asked me to snack it.
I looked the box-and-spoon setup eagerly. The spoon was
lying supine on the chill steel box. It was resting stylishly, with its
lower-head and mid-torso touching the box. The face of the spoon had some white
particles and it deceived me into believing that it was a popular South-Indian
snack called Puttu—not the piped version, but the powdered version. As opposed
to the folks who know the Puttu that is cylindrical, I have always known it
only by its powdered form. At least that is how my parents prepared it. For the
unknown, whatever the shape of the Puttu is, it is primarily a steamed dish,
with its main ingredients being coarsely powdered rice, grated coconut, and my
version had sugar as well. If it is a rich man's version, then it had cashews sautéed
in ghee.
So, I separated the couples—the spoon and the box, and went
into the separation act a further beyond. I removed the lid of the box and in
front of my eyes was something that looked very much like Puttu, but it was not
snow-white. It was mid-way between white and cream, glistening, and it also had
speckles of black sparsely placed.
As is the nature of anyone, I was first devouring the snack
with my eyes, wondering how it would taste. Then, immediately, I spaded out a
portion with the spoon and passed it on to my mouth. It was hard, like the cold
truth as against the soft Puttu, which was like the sweet lie.
For sure it was not Puttu. But then, the glistening part was
sugar and the black speckles were that of the coconut skin. So, with most of the
constituents figured out, I now delved into understanding what the main part
was. It was an enigma in a true sense!
As I was ruminating, the suspense was spread across, as the
box travelled to the nearby bays—word-of-mouth marketing! More eyes and taste buds
were now examining the make of the snack. The most common guesses of the eyes
were that it was Puttu. Some of the buds said it was stale bread powered and
garnished with coconut and sugar—that was certainly for the comic reliefs! More
guesses came in and none came close to the actual. Finally the hands and mind
that made it revealed that it was powdered Murukku (a snack made for Diwali
with primary ingredients being urad and rice flour) mixed with all other
constituents that most of them rightly guessed.
Later on, I checked to see how many Murukkus were powdered
to make a box-full of snack. They were 25. In fact, it would make a good
puzzle—how would you fit 25 Murukkus in a medium-sized box?
Altogether, the snack break was a success; kindling all the
elements—break from monotony, food for mind and stomach, mild satisfaction for
the taste-buds, humor, and all in the right mix.
9 comments:
whats the answer to the anagram
Who is this?
just another blog surfer, came across your blog through google...tried to solve the anagram but could not and now it is bugging me a bit
btw is the anagram personal...if so i am sorry to bother you.
Nothin personal...
There is just one clue and if i give it, it is pretty easy.
Anyways, let me complicate it. The clue is in the title of my latest post (dated Nov 30, 2011).
Sweet, evocative post :)
Thanks! :-)
Been a long time since I even posted anything along these lines! So, that way, it is in fact an important post for me.
very picturesque post... engaging and i could picture the 'puttu wannabe' in my mind's eye :)
Thanks CS! :-)
A few things about this post... This was written with so much zeal (an aftermath of that snack break incident) and so maybe it has come out well. But in fact, I somehow do not think it is my best, except for in a few places such as the text about the spoon.
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